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-rw-r--r--lib/vsprintf.c352
1 files changed, 197 insertions, 155 deletions
diff --git a/lib/vsprintf.c b/lib/vsprintf.c
index b235c96167d3..da39c608a28c 100644
--- a/lib/vsprintf.c
+++ b/lib/vsprintf.c
@@ -17,6 +17,7 @@
*/
#include <stdarg.h>
+#include <linux/clk-provider.h>
#include <linux/module.h> /* for KSYM_SYMBOL_LEN */
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/string.h>
@@ -32,6 +33,7 @@
#include <asm/page.h> /* for PAGE_SIZE */
#include <asm/sections.h> /* for dereference_function_descriptor() */
+#include <asm/byteorder.h> /* cpu_to_le16 */
#include <linux/string_helpers.h>
#include "kstrtox.h"
@@ -121,142 +123,145 @@ int skip_atoi(const char **s)
return i;
}
-/* Decimal conversion is by far the most typical, and is used
- * for /proc and /sys data. This directly impacts e.g. top performance
- * with many processes running. We optimize it for speed
- * using ideas described at <http://www.cs.uiowa.edu/~jones/bcd/divide.html>
- * (with permission from the author, Douglas W. Jones).
+/*
+ * Decimal conversion is by far the most typical, and is used for
+ * /proc and /sys data. This directly impacts e.g. top performance
+ * with many processes running. We optimize it for speed by emitting
+ * two characters at a time, using a 200 byte lookup table. This
+ * roughly halves the number of multiplications compared to computing
+ * the digits one at a time. Implementation strongly inspired by the
+ * previous version, which in turn used ideas described at
+ * <http://www.cs.uiowa.edu/~jones/bcd/divide.html> (with permission
+ * from the author, Douglas W. Jones).
+ *
+ * It turns out there is precisely one 26 bit fixed-point
+ * approximation a of 64/100 for which x/100 == (x * (u64)a) >> 32
+ * holds for all x in [0, 10^8-1], namely a = 0x28f5c29. The actual
+ * range happens to be somewhat larger (x <= 1073741898), but that's
+ * irrelevant for our purpose.
+ *
+ * For dividing a number in the range [10^4, 10^6-1] by 100, we still
+ * need a 32x32->64 bit multiply, so we simply use the same constant.
+ *
+ * For dividing a number in the range [100, 10^4-1] by 100, there are
+ * several options. The simplest is (x * 0x147b) >> 19, which is valid
+ * for all x <= 43698.
*/
-#if BITS_PER_LONG != 32 || BITS_PER_LONG_LONG != 64
-/* Formats correctly any integer in [0, 999999999] */
+static const u16 decpair[100] = {
+#define _(x) (__force u16) cpu_to_le16(((x % 10) | ((x / 10) << 8)) + 0x3030)
+ _( 0), _( 1), _( 2), _( 3), _( 4), _( 5), _( 6), _( 7), _( 8), _( 9),
+ _(10), _(11), _(12), _(13), _(14), _(15), _(16), _(17), _(18), _(19),
+ _(20), _(21), _(22), _(23), _(24), _(25), _(26), _(27), _(28), _(29),
+ _(30), _(31), _(32), _(33), _(34), _(35), _(36), _(37), _(38), _(39),
+ _(40), _(41), _(42), _(43), _(44), _(45), _(46), _(47), _(48), _(49),
+ _(50), _(51), _(52), _(53), _(54), _(55), _(56), _(57), _(58), _(59),
+ _(60), _(61), _(62), _(63), _(64), _(65), _(66), _(67), _(68), _(69),
+ _(70), _(71), _(72), _(73), _(74), _(75), _(76), _(77), _(78), _(79),
+ _(80), _(81), _(82), _(83), _(84), _(85), _(86), _(87), _(88), _(89),
+ _(90), _(91), _(92), _(93), _(94), _(95), _(96), _(97), _(98), _(99),
+#undef _
+};
+
+/*
+ * This will print a single '0' even if r == 0, since we would
+ * immediately jump to out_r where two 0s would be written but only
+ * one of them accounted for in buf. This is needed by ip4_string
+ * below. All other callers pass a non-zero value of r.
+*/
static noinline_for_stack
-char *put_dec_full9(char *buf, unsigned q)
+char *put_dec_trunc8(char *buf, unsigned r)
{
- unsigned r;
+ unsigned q;
- /*
- * Possible ways to approx. divide by 10
- * (x * 0x1999999a) >> 32 x < 1073741829 (multiply must be 64-bit)
- * (x * 0xcccd) >> 19 x < 81920 (x < 262149 when 64-bit mul)
- * (x * 0x6667) >> 18 x < 43699
- * (x * 0x3334) >> 17 x < 16389
- * (x * 0x199a) >> 16 x < 16389
- * (x * 0x0ccd) >> 15 x < 16389
- * (x * 0x0667) >> 14 x < 2739
- * (x * 0x0334) >> 13 x < 1029
- * (x * 0x019a) >> 12 x < 1029
- * (x * 0x00cd) >> 11 x < 1029 shorter code than * 0x67 (on i386)
- * (x * 0x0067) >> 10 x < 179
- * (x * 0x0034) >> 9 x < 69 same
- * (x * 0x001a) >> 8 x < 69 same
- * (x * 0x000d) >> 7 x < 69 same, shortest code (on i386)
- * (x * 0x0007) >> 6 x < 19
- * See <http://www.cs.uiowa.edu/~jones/bcd/divide.html>
- */
- r = (q * (uint64_t)0x1999999a) >> 32;
- *buf++ = (q - 10 * r) + '0'; /* 1 */
- q = (r * (uint64_t)0x1999999a) >> 32;
- *buf++ = (r - 10 * q) + '0'; /* 2 */
- r = (q * (uint64_t)0x1999999a) >> 32;
- *buf++ = (q - 10 * r) + '0'; /* 3 */
- q = (r * (uint64_t)0x1999999a) >> 32;
- *buf++ = (r - 10 * q) + '0'; /* 4 */
- r = (q * (uint64_t)0x1999999a) >> 32;
- *buf++ = (q - 10 * r) + '0'; /* 5 */
- /* Now value is under 10000, can avoid 64-bit multiply */
- q = (r * 0x199a) >> 16;
- *buf++ = (r - 10 * q) + '0'; /* 6 */
- r = (q * 0xcd) >> 11;
- *buf++ = (q - 10 * r) + '0'; /* 7 */
- q = (r * 0xcd) >> 11;
- *buf++ = (r - 10 * q) + '0'; /* 8 */
- *buf++ = q + '0'; /* 9 */
+ /* 1 <= r < 10^8 */
+ if (r < 100)
+ goto out_r;
+
+ /* 100 <= r < 10^8 */
+ q = (r * (u64)0x28f5c29) >> 32;
+ *((u16 *)buf) = decpair[r - 100*q];
+ buf += 2;
+
+ /* 1 <= q < 10^6 */
+ if (q < 100)
+ goto out_q;
+
+ /* 100 <= q < 10^6 */
+ r = (q * (u64)0x28f5c29) >> 32;
+ *((u16 *)buf) = decpair[q - 100*r];
+ buf += 2;
+
+ /* 1 <= r < 10^4 */
+ if (r < 100)
+ goto out_r;
+
+ /* 100 <= r < 10^4 */
+ q = (r * 0x147b) >> 19;
+ *((u16 *)buf) = decpair[r - 100*q];
+ buf += 2;
+out_q:
+ /* 1 <= q < 100 */
+ r = q;
+out_r:
+ /* 1 <= r < 100 */
+ *((u16 *)buf) = decpair[r];
+ buf += r < 10 ? 1 : 2;
return buf;
}
-#endif
-/* Similar to above but do not pad with zeros.
- * Code can be easily arranged to print 9 digits too, but our callers
- * always call put_dec_full9() instead when the number has 9 decimal digits.
- */
+#if BITS_PER_LONG == 64 && BITS_PER_LONG_LONG == 64
static noinline_for_stack
-char *put_dec_trunc8(char *buf, unsigned r)
+char *put_dec_full8(char *buf, unsigned r)
{
unsigned q;
- /* Copy of previous function's body with added early returns */
- while (r >= 10000) {
- q = r + '0';
- r = (r * (uint64_t)0x1999999a) >> 32;
- *buf++ = q - 10*r;
- }
-
- q = (r * 0x199a) >> 16; /* r <= 9999 */
- *buf++ = (r - 10 * q) + '0';
- if (q == 0)
- return buf;
- r = (q * 0xcd) >> 11; /* q <= 999 */
- *buf++ = (q - 10 * r) + '0';
- if (r == 0)
- return buf;
- q = (r * 0xcd) >> 11; /* r <= 99 */
- *buf++ = (r - 10 * q) + '0';
- if (q == 0)
- return buf;
- *buf++ = q + '0'; /* q <= 9 */
- return buf;
-}
+ /* 0 <= r < 10^8 */
+ q = (r * (u64)0x28f5c29) >> 32;
+ *((u16 *)buf) = decpair[r - 100*q];
+ buf += 2;
-/* There are two algorithms to print larger numbers.
- * One is generic: divide by 1000000000 and repeatedly print
- * groups of (up to) 9 digits. It's conceptually simple,
- * but requires a (unsigned long long) / 1000000000 division.
- *
- * Second algorithm splits 64-bit unsigned long long into 16-bit chunks,
- * manipulates them cleverly and generates groups of 4 decimal digits.
- * It so happens that it does NOT require long long division.
- *
- * If long is > 32 bits, division of 64-bit values is relatively easy,
- * and we will use the first algorithm.
- * If long long is > 64 bits (strange architecture with VERY large long long),
- * second algorithm can't be used, and we again use the first one.
- *
- * Else (if long is 32 bits and long long is 64 bits) we use second one.
- */
+ /* 0 <= q < 10^6 */
+ r = (q * (u64)0x28f5c29) >> 32;
+ *((u16 *)buf) = decpair[q - 100*r];
+ buf += 2;
-#if BITS_PER_LONG != 32 || BITS_PER_LONG_LONG != 64
+ /* 0 <= r < 10^4 */
+ q = (r * 0x147b) >> 19;
+ *((u16 *)buf) = decpair[r - 100*q];
+ buf += 2;
-/* First algorithm: generic */
+ /* 0 <= q < 100 */
+ *((u16 *)buf) = decpair[q];
+ buf += 2;
+ return buf;
+}
-static
+static noinline_for_stack
char *put_dec(char *buf, unsigned long long n)
{
- if (n >= 100*1000*1000) {
- while (n >= 1000*1000*1000)
- buf = put_dec_full9(buf, do_div(n, 1000*1000*1000));
- if (n >= 100*1000*1000)
- return put_dec_full9(buf, n);
- }
+ if (n >= 100*1000*1000)
+ buf = put_dec_full8(buf, do_div(n, 100*1000*1000));
+ /* 1 <= n <= 1.6e11 */
+ if (n >= 100*1000*1000)
+ buf = put_dec_full8(buf, do_div(n, 100*1000*1000));
+ /* 1 <= n < 1e8 */
return put_dec_trunc8(buf, n);
}
-#else
-
-/* Second algorithm: valid only for 64-bit long longs */
+#elif BITS_PER_LONG == 32 && BITS_PER_LONG_LONG == 64
-/* See comment in put_dec_full9 for choice of constants */
-static noinline_for_stack
-void put_dec_full4(char *buf, unsigned q)
+static void
+put_dec_full4(char *buf, unsigned r)
{
- unsigned r;
- r = (q * 0xccd) >> 15;
- buf[0] = (q - 10 * r) + '0';
- q = (r * 0xcd) >> 11;
- buf[1] = (r - 10 * q) + '0';
- r = (q * 0xcd) >> 11;
- buf[2] = (q - 10 * r) + '0';
- buf[3] = r + '0';
+ unsigned q;
+
+ /* 0 <= r < 10^4 */
+ q = (r * 0x147b) >> 19;
+ *((u16 *)buf) = decpair[r - 100*q];
+ buf += 2;
+ /* 0 <= q < 100 */
+ *((u16 *)buf) = decpair[q];
}
/*
@@ -264,9 +269,9 @@ void put_dec_full4(char *buf, unsigned q)
* The approximation x/10000 == (x * 0x346DC5D7) >> 43
* holds for all x < 1,128,869,999. The largest value this
* helper will ever be asked to convert is 1,125,520,955.
- * (d1 in the put_dec code, assuming n is all-ones).
+ * (second call in the put_dec code, assuming n is all-ones).
*/
-static
+static noinline_for_stack
unsigned put_dec_helper4(char *buf, unsigned x)
{
uint32_t q = (x * (uint64_t)0x346DC5D7) >> 43;
@@ -293,6 +298,8 @@ char *put_dec(char *buf, unsigned long long n)
d2 = (h ) & 0xffff;
d3 = (h >> 16); /* implicit "& 0xffff" */
+ /* n = 2^48 d3 + 2^32 d2 + 2^16 d1 + d0
+ = 281_4749_7671_0656 d3 + 42_9496_7296 d2 + 6_5536 d1 + d0 */
q = 656 * d3 + 7296 * d2 + 5536 * d1 + ((uint32_t)n & 0xffff);
q = put_dec_helper4(buf, q);
@@ -322,7 +329,8 @@ char *put_dec(char *buf, unsigned long long n)
*/
int num_to_str(char *buf, int size, unsigned long long num)
{
- char tmp[sizeof(num) * 3];
+ /* put_dec requires 2-byte alignment of the buffer. */
+ char tmp[sizeof(num) * 3] __aligned(2);
int idx, len;
/* put_dec() may work incorrectly for num = 0 (generate "", not "0") */
@@ -340,11 +348,11 @@ int num_to_str(char *buf, int size, unsigned long long num)
return len;
}
-#define ZEROPAD 1 /* pad with zero */
-#define SIGN 2 /* unsigned/signed long */
+#define SIGN 1 /* unsigned/signed, must be 1 */
+#define LEFT 2 /* left justified */
#define PLUS 4 /* show plus */
#define SPACE 8 /* space if plus */
-#define LEFT 16 /* left justified */
+#define ZEROPAD 16 /* pad with zero, must be 16 == '0' - ' ' */
#define SMALL 32 /* use lowercase in hex (must be 32 == 0x20) */
#define SPECIAL 64 /* prefix hex with "0x", octal with "0" */
@@ -383,10 +391,8 @@ static noinline_for_stack
char *number(char *buf, char *end, unsigned long long num,
struct printf_spec spec)
{
- /* we are called with base 8, 10 or 16, only, thus don't need "G..." */
- static const char digits[16] = "0123456789ABCDEF"; /* "GHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ"; */
-
- char tmp[66];
+ /* put_dec requires 2-byte alignment of the buffer. */
+ char tmp[3 * sizeof(num)] __aligned(2);
char sign;
char locase;
int need_pfx = ((spec.flags & SPECIAL) && spec.base != 10);
@@ -422,12 +428,7 @@ char *number(char *buf, char *end, unsigned long long num,
/* generate full string in tmp[], in reverse order */
i = 0;
if (num < spec.base)
- tmp[i++] = digits[num] | locase;
- /* Generic code, for any base:
- else do {
- tmp[i++] = (digits[do_div(num,base)] | locase);
- } while (num != 0);
- */
+ tmp[i++] = hex_asc_upper[num] | locase;
else if (spec.base != 10) { /* 8 or 16 */
int mask = spec.base - 1;
int shift = 3;
@@ -435,7 +436,7 @@ char *number(char *buf, char *end, unsigned long long num,
if (spec.base == 16)
shift = 4;
do {
- tmp[i++] = (digits[((unsigned char)num) & mask] | locase);
+ tmp[i++] = (hex_asc_upper[((unsigned char)num) & mask] | locase);
num >>= shift;
} while (num);
} else { /* base 10 */
@@ -447,7 +448,7 @@ char *number(char *buf, char *end, unsigned long long num,
spec.precision = i;
/* leading space padding */
spec.field_width -= spec.precision;
- if (!(spec.flags & (ZEROPAD+LEFT))) {
+ if (!(spec.flags & (ZEROPAD | LEFT))) {
while (--spec.field_width >= 0) {
if (buf < end)
*buf = ' ';
@@ -475,7 +476,8 @@ char *number(char *buf, char *end, unsigned long long num,
}
/* zero or space padding */
if (!(spec.flags & LEFT)) {
- char c = (spec.flags & ZEROPAD) ? '0' : ' ';
+ char c = ' ' + (spec.flags & ZEROPAD);
+ BUILD_BUG_ON(' ' + ZEROPAD != '0');
while (--spec.field_width >= 0) {
if (buf < end)
*buf = c;
@@ -783,11 +785,19 @@ char *hex_string(char *buf, char *end, u8 *addr, struct printf_spec spec,
if (spec.field_width > 0)
len = min_t(int, spec.field_width, 64);
- for (i = 0; i < len && buf < end - 1; i++) {
- buf = hex_byte_pack(buf, addr[i]);
+ for (i = 0; i < len; ++i) {
+ if (buf < end)
+ *buf = hex_asc_hi(addr[i]);
+ ++buf;
+ if (buf < end)
+ *buf = hex_asc_lo(addr[i]);
+ ++buf;
- if (buf < end && separator && i != len - 1)
- *buf++ = separator;
+ if (separator && i != len - 1) {
+ if (buf < end)
+ *buf = separator;
+ ++buf;
+ }
}
return buf;
@@ -942,7 +952,7 @@ char *ip4_string(char *p, const u8 *addr, const char *fmt)
break;
}
for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) {
- char temp[3]; /* hold each IP quad in reverse order */
+ char temp[4] __aligned(2); /* hold each IP quad in reverse order */
int digits = put_dec_trunc8(temp, addr[index]) - temp;
if (leading_zeros) {
if (digits < 3)
@@ -1233,8 +1243,12 @@ char *escaped_string(char *buf, char *end, u8 *addr, struct printf_spec spec,
len = spec.field_width < 0 ? 1 : spec.field_width;
- /* Ignore the error. We print as many characters as we can */
- string_escape_mem(addr, len, &buf, end - buf, flags, NULL);
+ /*
+ * string_escape_mem() writes as many characters as it can to
+ * the given buffer, and returns the total size of the output
+ * had the buffer been big enough.
+ */
+ buf += string_escape_mem(addr, len, buf, buf < end ? end - buf : 0, flags, NULL);
return buf;
}
@@ -1322,6 +1336,30 @@ char *address_val(char *buf, char *end, const void *addr,
return number(buf, end, num, spec);
}
+static noinline_for_stack
+char *clock(char *buf, char *end, struct clk *clk, struct printf_spec spec,
+ const char *fmt)
+{
+ if (!IS_ENABLED(CONFIG_HAVE_CLK) || !clk)
+ return string(buf, end, NULL, spec);
+
+ switch (fmt[1]) {
+ case 'r':
+ return number(buf, end, clk_get_rate(clk), spec);
+
+ case 'n':
+ default:
+#ifdef CONFIG_COMMON_CLK
+ return string(buf, end, __clk_get_name(clk), spec);
+#else
+ spec.base = 16;
+ spec.field_width = sizeof(unsigned long) * 2 + 2;
+ spec.flags |= SPECIAL | SMALL | ZEROPAD;
+ return number(buf, end, (unsigned long)clk, spec);
+#endif
+ }
+}
+
int kptr_restrict __read_mostly;
/*
@@ -1404,6 +1442,11 @@ int kptr_restrict __read_mostly;
* (default assumed to be phys_addr_t, passed by reference)
* - 'd[234]' For a dentry name (optionally 2-4 last components)
* - 'D[234]' Same as 'd' but for a struct file
+ * - 'C' For a clock, it prints the name (Common Clock Framework) or address
+ * (legacy clock framework) of the clock
+ * - 'Cn' For a clock, it prints the name (Common Clock Framework) or address
+ * (legacy clock framework) of the clock
+ * - 'Cr' For a clock, it prints the current rate of the clock
*
* Note: The difference between 'S' and 'F' is that on ia64 and ppc64
* function pointers are really function descriptors, which contain a
@@ -1548,6 +1591,8 @@ char *pointer(const char *fmt, char *buf, char *end, void *ptr,
return address_val(buf, end, ptr, spec, fmt);
case 'd':
return dentry_name(buf, end, ptr, spec, fmt);
+ case 'C':
+ return clock(buf, end, ptr, spec, fmt);
case 'D':
return dentry_name(buf, end,
((const struct file *)ptr)->f_path.dentry,
@@ -1738,29 +1783,21 @@ qualifier:
if (spec->qualifier == 'L')
spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_LONG_LONG;
else if (spec->qualifier == 'l') {
- if (spec->flags & SIGN)
- spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_LONG;
- else
- spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_ULONG;
+ BUILD_BUG_ON(FORMAT_TYPE_ULONG + SIGN != FORMAT_TYPE_LONG);
+ spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_ULONG + (spec->flags & SIGN);
} else if (_tolower(spec->qualifier) == 'z') {
spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_SIZE_T;
} else if (spec->qualifier == 't') {
spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_PTRDIFF;
} else if (spec->qualifier == 'H') {
- if (spec->flags & SIGN)
- spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_BYTE;
- else
- spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_UBYTE;
+ BUILD_BUG_ON(FORMAT_TYPE_UBYTE + SIGN != FORMAT_TYPE_BYTE);
+ spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_UBYTE + (spec->flags & SIGN);
} else if (spec->qualifier == 'h') {
- if (spec->flags & SIGN)
- spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_SHORT;
- else
- spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_USHORT;
+ BUILD_BUG_ON(FORMAT_TYPE_USHORT + SIGN != FORMAT_TYPE_SHORT);
+ spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_USHORT + (spec->flags & SIGN);
} else {
- if (spec->flags & SIGN)
- spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_INT;
- else
- spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_UINT;
+ BUILD_BUG_ON(FORMAT_TYPE_UINT + SIGN != FORMAT_TYPE_INT);
+ spec->type = FORMAT_TYPE_UINT + (spec->flags & SIGN);
}
return ++fmt - start;
@@ -1800,6 +1837,11 @@ qualifier:
* %*pE[achnops] print an escaped buffer
* %*ph[CDN] a variable-length hex string with a separator (supports up to 64
* bytes of the input)
+ * %pC output the name (Common Clock Framework) or address (legacy clock
+ * framework) of a clock
+ * %pCn output the name (Common Clock Framework) or address (legacy clock
+ * framework) of a clock
+ * %pCr output the current rate of a clock
* %n is ignored
*
* ** Please update Documentation/printk-formats.txt when making changes **